"ii) <i^^'
BRITISH SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY IN EGYPT
AND EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT
TWENTY-THIRD YEAR, 1917
CORPUS OF
PREHISTORIC POTTERY
AND PALETTES
BY
W. M. FLINDERS PETRIE
HON. D.C.L., LL.D., D.LIT., F.R.S., F.B.A., M.R.I.A.
0
LONDON
BRITISH SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY IN EGYPT
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, GOWER STREET, W.C.
AND
CONSTABLE & CO., LTD., lo ORANGE STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE, W.C.
AND
BERNARD QUARITCH, ii GRAFTON STREET. NEW BOND STREET, W.
1921
DT
5"7
I/.E2-
PKXNTSD BT
BAZSLL^ WAISON AND VINKT, U>.,
u>m>ON a:9d atlesbory
BRITISH SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY IN EGYPT
AND EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT
PATRON;
F.-M. VISCOUNT ALLENBY, G.C.B., G.C.M.G.
GENERAL COMMITTEE (* Executive Members)
Lord Abercromby
Henry Balfour
Rev. Dr. T. G. Bonney
Prof. R. C. BOSANQUET
Rt. Hon. Viscount Bryce of
Dechmont
•Prof. J. B. Bury
•SoMERS Clarke
Edward Clodd
Sir \V. Boyd Dawkins
Prof. Sir S. Dill
•Miss Eckenstein
Sir Gregory Foster
Sir James Frazer
•Prof. Ernest Gardner
Prof. Percy Gardner
Rt. Hon. Sir George T. Goldie
Dr. Gowland
Mrs. J. R. Green
Rt. Hon. F.-M. Lord Grenfell
Mrs. F. Ll. Griffith
Dr. A. C. Haddon
Rev. Dr. A. C. Headlam
D. G. Hogarth
•Basil Holmes
Sir Henry H. Howorth
Baron A. von Hugel
Prof. A. S. Hunt
Mrs. C. H. W. Johns
Sir Henry Miers
Honorary Treasurer — •H. Sefton-Jones
Honorary Director — Prof. Flinders Petrie
Honorary Secretary —Mrs. H. F. Petrie
J. G. Milne
Robert Mond
Prof. Montague
Walter Morrison
•Miss M. A. Murray
P. E. Newberry
F. W. Percival
Dr. Pinches
Dr. G. W. Prothero
Dr. G. A. Reisner
Sir William Richmond
Prof. F. W. Ridgeway
Mrs. Strong
Lady Tirard
E. TowRY Whyte
AMERICAN BRANCH
THE EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT
President
James Henry Breasted, Ph.D.
Vice-Presidents
William J. Holland, Ph.D., Sc.D., LL.D.
Edmund J. James, Ph.D., LL.D.
F. W. Shipley, Ph.D.
Charles F. Thwing, D.D., LL.D.
Benjamin Ide Wheeler, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D
William Copley Winslow, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D.
Hon. Secretary
Prof. Mitchell Carroll, Ph.D.
Hon. Treasurer
Rev. William C. Winslow, D.D.
PUBLICATIONS
OF THE EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT AND
BRITISH SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY IN EGYPT
I. BALLAS, 18955 by J. E. QuiBELL. (Out of print; obtainable in joint volume NAQADA AND
BALLAS, by W. M. F. Petrie.)
n THE RAMESSEUM, 1896? by J. E. Quibell. (Out of print.)
III. EL KAB, 1897; by J. E. Quibell.
rV. HIERAKONPOLIS I, 18985 text by W. M. F. P. 43 plates. 20s. net.
V. HIERAKONPOLIS II, 1899; by F. VV. Green and J. E. Quibell. 39 plates (4 coloured and 20
photographic). 35^. net.
VI. EL ARABAH, 19005 by J. Garstang. 40 plates, xts. net. (Out of print.)
VII. MAHASNA, 1901 5 by J. Garstang and Kurt Sethe. 43 plates. (Out of print.)
VIII. TEMPLE OF THE KINGS, 19025 by A. St. George Caulfeild. 24 plates. i(,s. net. (Out of print.)
IX. THE OSIREION, 19035 by Margaret A. Murray. 37 plates.
X. SAQQARA MASTABAS I, 1904 5 by M. A. Murray ; and GUROB, by L. Loat. 64 plates. 30^. net.
XI. SAQQARA MASTABAS II, 19055 by Hilda Petrie. {In preparation.)
XIL HYKSOS AND ISRAELITE CITIES. 1906 5 by W. M. Flinder.s Petrie and J. Garrow Duncan.
40 plates. 25^. net. In double volume with 94 plates. 45^. net. (This latter is out of print.)
XIII. GIZEH AND RIFEH, 19075 by W. M. Flinders Petrie. 40 plates. 2$s. net. In double volume
with 109 plates. 50J. net.
XIV. ATHRIBIS, 19085 by W. M. Flinders Petrie, J. H. Walker and E. B. Knobel. 43 plates. 2^s. net.
(Out of print.)
XV. MEMPHIS I, 19085 by W. M. F. Petrie and J. H. Walker. 54 plates. 25^. net.
XVL QURNEH, 19095 by W. M. F. Petrie and J. H. Walker. 56 plates. (Out of print.)
XVIL THE PALACE OF APRIES (MEMPHIS II), 1909 5 by W. M. Flinders Petrie and J. H. Walker.
35 plates. 25^. net.
XVm. MEYDUM AND MEMPHIS (III), 19105 by W. M. F. Petrie, E. Mackay, and G. Wainwright.
47 plates. 25X. net.
XIX. HISTORICAL STUDIES, 1910. 25 plates. 25^. net. (Studies, vol. ii.)
XX. ROMAN PORTRAITS (MEMPHIS IV), 19115 by W. M. F. Petrie. 35 plates. 25*. net.
XXI. THE LABYRINTH AND GERZEH, 1911 5 by W. M. F. Petrie, E. Mackay, and G. Wainwright.
52 plates. 25X. net.
XXn. PORTFOLIO OF HAWARA PORTRAITS. 24 coloured plates. 50.?. net.
XXm. TARKHAN I AND MEMPHIS V, 19125 by W. M. F. Petrie. 81 plates. 251. net.
XXIV. HELIOPOLIS I AND KAFR AMMAR, 19125 by VV. M. F. Petrie. 58 plates. 25^. net.
XXV. RIQQEH AND MEMPHIS VL 1913; by R. Engelbach, Hilda Petrie, M. A. Murray, and
W. M. F. Petrie. 62 plates. 25^. net.
XXVL TARKHAN II, 19135 by VV. M. F. Petrie. 72 plates. 25^. net.
XXVII. LAHUN I, THE TREASURE, 19145 by Guy Brunton. 23 plates (coloured). 63^. net.
XXVIIL HARAGEH5 by R. Engelbach. {In preparation.)
XXIX. SCARABS AND CYLINDERS, 19155 by W. M. F. Petrie. 73 plates. 7,2s. net.
XXX. TOOLS AND WEAPONS, 1916 5 by VV. M. F. Petrie. 76 plates. 35/. ««/.
XXXI. PREHISTORIC EGYPT, 19175 by W. M. F. Petrie. 53 plates. 25^. net.
XXXn. PREHISTORIC POTTERY OF EGYPT 5 by W. M. F. Petrie. 58 plates. 2ss. net.
LAHUN II, THE PYRAMID. {In preparation.)
Subscriptions of One Guinea for the Annual Single Volumes, or Two
Guineas for the Two Annual Volumes, are received by the Hon.
Secretary, at the Edwards Library, University College,
Gower Street, London, W.C., where also copies
of the above works can be obtained.
THE CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY
It is hardly needful, after the discussion of the
dating in the previous volume on Prehistoric Egypt,
to describe the present corpus, or the mode of using
it. It contains all the forms published in the various
works enumerated at the beginning of the volume
named, unified as a whole and provided with se-
quence dates. The practical use of it is by the
graveside. So soon as a grave is cleared and
plauined, then the pottery can be laid out in order,
each type searched for in the corpus, and noted by
its letter and number on the card register. The
limits of date can be copied out, and the resulting
limits of the date of the grave may then be added
as the date on the card. Such pottery as is worth
removal, and especially any new type that should
be drawn, can then be separated, and the remainder
of common pottery be retximed to the grave and
covered in.
In unifying the various additions— some 700 —
which have been found since the 300 types of
Naqada, many irregularities have been noticed,
and some editing of the whole became absolutely
necessary. Even different t5^es had been given
the same letter by different discoverers. In the
Decorated pottery especially, the additions had
made a complete revision of tj^es i to 19 needful.
In this part, therefore, the present corpus makes an
entire break with the previous registers. Some other
slight changes became needful also in other classes,
but the minimum of change has been made. All of
these alterations of designation are completely
stated on pi. Ix, under the heading of each volume
in which a type has previously appeared. On the
same plate are conversion tables for reducing
Reisner's short corpus used in Nubia, to the present
corpus numbers. Every chainge therefore between
this corpus and previous registers is on pi. Ix.
The changes of numbers from the previous English
publications, were mostly due to those who made
additions not recognising the principles of arrange-
ment. Such principles may be arbitrary, but yet
they must be kept up, or else a corpus would become
so confused that identification of forms would be
difficult.
The principles which must be observed in all
additions to the corpus are as follow :
1. The forms are chiefly classed from the most
open, such as shallow saucers, to the most closed,
such as bottles. In carrying this out, the bowls are
classed by the slope of the edge, — the most open,
the most sloping, the almost upright, the vertical
and the different degrees of incurving. Another
criterion is the proportion of height to width ; some
large classes of vases are divided into those under
or over certain proportions. In some cases obvious
inversions of order occur, because some types con-
tinue to vary to a great extent, and after tracing out
that line, a turning back to some other type has to
be made. The indefinite variation over so large a
number of features, makes any single-line order
necessarily illogical. All that can be hoped for is
to arrange the types so that they can be searched
for in the shortest time. In all additions the prin-
ciple of arrangement must first be observed before
inserting a new form.
2. Another confusion has been caused by not
noticing what is included in an established class,
such as the black polished pottery in F class. Ad-
ditions to this have been made into a new class,
but are here restored to F.
3. A needless multiplication of new tj^es has
been made, when the differences from established
types were but slight or imperceptible. Variations
should be ignored when they are within the chances
of copying ; the two sides of a jar often differ
perceptibly, and such slight differences are im-
material. Strictly, no vase is perfectly like
another, and we must put together all those which
THE CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY
may reasonably have been intended to be alike.
To separate them detracts from the value of the
ranges of types in date.
4. Additions should be spaced apart in the letter-
ing, not asa b c d but as c, g, m, r, so as to allow of
intermediate forms being inserted. Of course varia-
tions closely alike may have consecutive letters.
The lettering should follow the natural order of
forms, as near as may be.
5. Differences of size and of material may be
largely ignored. It is usual to find vases of the same
form of various sizes, and even in different material,
yet contemporary, as in B, P, and R.
The system of the corpus follows the classification
in "Naqada" into nine classes, as no more dis-
tinctive method has appeared. The first object of
all divisions must be the most rapid identification
of a form, and the existing classes provide for that.
The class of Late refers to dktinctive styles of pottery,
hard and thin, or else to the long jars sometimes
brown and soft, in any case distinct from the previous
classes. At the top right of each figure is the type
number and letter. At the bottom left is the refei-
ence to the source, those without reference being
from the Naqada corpus. At the bottom right is
the sequence date of the reference. The works
referred to are as follow :
Amr.
C. Ab.
DeM.
Di.
Ger.
Har.
Mah.
N.
N.D.
Nub. 7.
Nub. 8.
R.T.
Tark.
U.C.
Maclver, El Amrah.
Peet, Cemeteries of Abydos.
De Morgan Age de la Pierre.
Petrie, Diospolis.
Wainwright, Gerzeh (in The Labyrinth, etc.).
Engelbach, Harageh (not yet published).
Ayrton and Loat, Mahasna.
Naqada (not marked to types, only to tomb
numbers).
No date.
Reisner, Archaeological Survey of Nubia.
Firth, Archaeological Survey of Nubia,
1908-g (with references, E.D., etc., to
classes).
Petrie, Royal Tombs.
Petrie, Tar khan I and II.
University College collection, with N and
grave number if from Naqadeh.
Ab.
Petrie, Abydos, I.
The date such as 32-38 means that the examples
extend between 32 and 38 ; 32, 38 means that dated
examples are only known at 32 and at 38 ; (32-38)
means that only one dated example is known, in a
grave of uncertain date between 32 and 38.
It should be observed that there is a different
system in the corpus of white cross-lined pottery
arranged by the forms, scale i : 6, and the U.C.
examples in Prehistoric Egypt, scale i : 3, arranged
by the subject of the designs.
THE CORPUS OF SLATE PALETTES
The plates of slates in Naqada were merely a
catalogue of the forms foiond, without framing
a regular corpus or excluding duplicate forms.
Since that was issued many more forms have been
registered, and some unification of the whole is
necessary. The present corpus includes all the
types that have been published in recent works.
The references are :
Plain numbers, Naqadeh graves.
A. El Amrah, and cemeteries b, c.
C.A.I. Cemeteries of Abydos I .
D. DiospoUs.
F. Viith.A.S.ofNubia.
G.W. Gerzeh, Wainwright.
M. Mahasna, Ayrton and Loat.
N. Naqada ; with B or T, cemeteries.
R. "Rehsatx, A.S. of Nubia.
T. Tarkhan.
T. II. Tarkhan II.
U. Hu (DiospoUs) references, not drawn sepa-
rately.
W.G. Wainwright, Gerzeh.
The top right number and letter is the type. The
bottom left reference is the source, according to the
letters just stated. The figures at the bottom right
are the Sequence Dates ; where several are known
for a type, the earliest and latest are quoted, and
the best defined are selected. The inclusion of so
many new forms has made it necessary to adopt fresh
numbers for this final corpus, mostly rather different
from the mere catalogue numbers used in Naqada.
THE REGISTERS
On pi. xl are given the corpus equivalents of the
numbers used by Dr. Reisner in the first volume of
the Archaeological Survey of Nubia, 1907-8 : these
were abandoned in the succeeding volumes : also
the alterations which have proved to be necessary
in unif5dng all the corpus numbers of many publica-
tions. All these registers are needed when referring
to previous works.
On pi. Ixi is a list of the pottery types in University
College, with reference to their sources when known :
D, Diospolis ; Gerz., Gerzeh ; N, Naqada, with
number of grave. Also a list of the sources of the
type drawings of white Cross-lined pottery, with
sequence dates when known ; and the same for
Black-incised pottery. Below are references to a few
more types, so far as they can be distinguished in the
photographs of Mahasna, by Ayrton and Loat, and
four copies of the unusual types. The curved spray
in 498 is imique ; the figures of women with a fringe
girdle in 100 K are very rare ; the vase with animals
along the length of it, is imique ; and the hippo-
potamus hunt is very rare, see iype 5 m.
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY.
lA U
BLACK TOP. B 1-10.
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. BLACK TOP. B 11-20.
11" Ud 11/
MahT
33-4 6
19 K
19 M
19 P
19T
20 D
0.3 JO
20 G
E.D.Hb
1 ; 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY
BLACK TOP.
21rf
B 21 -25.
31 -fi
1 : 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. BLACK TOP. B 25-34.
7 25 N ( —) 25 s
M*K.
25 T
7
26"
3i-ST»,bf
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26c
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(276
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34
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. BLACK TOP. B 35-51.
35(; 35(i 35 E 35 G
35 H
37-A4
31-74-
At.J.VI 79
■^Sfc-S"!
A3 bt,
3l.-io
1: 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. BLACK TOP. B 53-64,
53 F
VI.
I
35-3^ MaK. (J6-Vt;
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. BLACK TOP. B 65 78.
VII.
68 c
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. BLACK TOP. B 79-99.
79a 796 1? ° 81 B ... -,81G 81H
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. POLISHED RED. P 1-22.
1* IB IE IP
IX.
18
1/ n^tV^..,/^
1 : 6
32
V
32 8
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. POLISHED RED. P 23-34.
230 23*
23 D
33
33 D
33 F
34a
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CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. POLISHED RED. P 35-41.
ttsiK.
41A7.
1: 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. POLISHED RED. P 42-62.
43
XII.
'45D 45 E
47" 476
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62 N
>8.-ff^ Gt-Y. (4*7- bi)
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CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. POLISHED RED. P 63-82.
'64 G Y
XIII.
65 B
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57-69
"AJ-S? 57-7*
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CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. POLISHED RED. P 82-99.
84 A
sa-bS \^57-6H Ccv- ^ftx-ia) MjlW
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1 : 6
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CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. FANCY. F 5-24.
56
1 : 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. FANCY. F 24-39.
24 N
27
(Jb-W)
'«J,*-7
46-61
45-S«
32 a
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39 C
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39 Q
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CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. FANCY. F 40-55.
XVII.
42a
43o
43ft
CO ^
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45 A
45 B
46 F
u.c
46 M
u.c.
l^
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65
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58a
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. FANCY. F 58-69.
58 B ^,_ X> ■ "t^ ^^"^ ^^'^
580 ^ """^
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XVIII.
58 a-
Brvivi^
^o-51>
68 K
58 M
68 F
58 S
68 V
68 M
68 P
'.-'■> f^
£9b
S9C
69 G
u.c
69 K
«J c,
69 M
69 P
U.c.
69 Q
69 T
^^^^ '^^}^^Q~N:>
U.C
o.c
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7011
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. BLACK POLISHED. F 70-99.
70b 72* 72b 72e
XiX.
f78
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81»
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80 H 80 J 80 M 80 N
8ie>/
81 M
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63 A
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91D
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91 K
91 L
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91 N
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93
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CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. WHITE CROSS-LINED. C 1-15.
XX.
4s
5 0
3B
4 H
68
6D
9D
9H
10 E
lOH
10 L
ION
10 S
11
120
12 H
12 N
13C
1: 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. WHITE CROSS-LINED. C I6-3I.
XXI.
27 N
i
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. WHITE CROSS-LINED. C 32-47.
XXII.
42 0
42 s
44 E
44 N
43 B
43 s
43 D
46 D
46 M
1 : 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. WHITE CROSS-LINED. C 48-74.
XXIII.
49 E
«es,^. 49 H
50
^"^f^Hm
53
W
56
57
^^^ ^^^
60
61
63 b
62
63 H
63 N
64 B
64 H
64 N
64 S
64 U
65 O
65 M
66 E
66 M
67 D 67 L 68 69
i
70 E
70 m
72 H
73 8
73 H
73 N
74 D
V4 R
1: 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. WHITE CROSS-LINED. C 75-85.
XXIV.
76 M
75 E 75 N
76 15
II
76 H
^iMm
76 R
76 T
76 W
77 B
77 M
78
79 B
79 H
79 N
m^
WMm
81
111 ■ ■ ii"°
wk S i
85 D
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. WHITE CROSS-LINED. C 91-100.
XXV.
91
93 D
93 M
96 L
94
98 N
10.0 E
96 E
98 D
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1 :3
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. BLACK INCISED. N 2-40.
XXVI.
20 E
23
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1:3
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. BLACK INCISED. N 50-80.
XXVII.
55
50 D
56
50 K
68
69
.65
62
60
63
68 -
80
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CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. WAVY HANDLED. W 1-23.
XXVIII.
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as ., — ^-^ 26
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CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. WAVY HANDLED. W 48-90.
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& CorcLccat. ^a-cnCid.
( V ;=Z2Z=
Z=CZ3=EZZi.
^:3<
M
\f/ ■ Ill' .■ »
V i I I j\^ i < 1 1 r >- in.cisU
^ 2ZZZ2ZSZ2Z ^•^^^i/
1 :6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. DECORATED. D 1-14.
p 1 D
2 D
2K
XXXI.
2 s
6 B
6 C
6M
8 P
Av^v-
48,*i-
^1.-63
5-X r»»-5T» '*''<^1
10 L
y.C.
GcrJ
12 H
a^,S7
^(-64) U.C.
13d
13 K
13C
^5rS7
(ii1-S3>
13 Y
14 G
13W
u.c.
3t o.t^ '
14&
14 M
14P
1: 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. DECORATED. D 15-29.
XXXII.
15
16 A v.t........i 16b
44
NI63b (yi-Ai)
u.c
16 c ff!(;''.\\f>^^4
I? 16 J
16 P
^^^ jllG S
oey. (fiO-bS) U.C.
J>i
•-•■-•-■&'„
20 B
p 20 a
u.c.
1: 6
A7/*«
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. DECORATED. D 31-42.
31 F 3i c ai L 31 s
4.0-AS"
U.C.
C>b
31 C 31 L
U.C
o.c.
32
ss
"\1^
33a
33b
.34 D
34 K
0®
Oev. rS Pi 5T
3Sa
40-J-i
7 3Sb
y.c.
A^6-yx, «"9
35 N
U.C.
40. 54-
3«b
yy
360
36 G
t^O.SO
36<1
U.C
36 H
X o.FLa.r
36 P
5 37
Km-f.
41 A
40 L 40 M
41J
^>3
O.C.
3)«.f*\.ix.3 u.p.v.j.
U.C-
41 M
41 N
41 U
41 S
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. DECORATED. D 43-49.
43 A 43 C
43 T
44 P
4S-63
43 B
oc
43 K
w.c:
^}.c..^
44 D.
U.C
XXXIV.
46 B
Ct,-r (fl.-<>3)
Gvr. (fS-bi)
45 M
v^
46 K
46 D
Atnv.
47 C
47 a
49 B
i;3
48 C
U.C.
47 M
»«.M.X.I
(5-7-60
49 F
A-mV.\ _/(«-r6j ^
iiimiiimur
J>eM. IX.t
Da-M V.3.
1: 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. DECORATED. D 50-66.
50 B - 51 B
^ HaW
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. DECORATED. D 61-73.
XXXVI.
61B
L.p iv.7
S3a
^-63
61 K
» 61 M
OtY. (i,7.7l)
U.C
^R 830
3* -4-1
67 D
^fc-5-g
U.C
67 J
u,c.
67 B
67 L
68 A
1: 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. DECORATED. D 78-93.
78 A
XXXVII.
78 B
' 78 D
79 M
uc
3^■it
82
40-41
08-4J)
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. ROUGH. R 1-40.
6
7»
♦x-*3
17 G'
2ia
2S*
33b
A^
16
17
Ai-70 M»K..
17C
81b
MJ.k.
2«>i
' 71-7 9
26 B
18
73, So
cr7
210
aid
CI?
26 C
if- Jo
22b
37-7 «•
23 C
ftt-79
t\»X.
23a
23 d
39-7*
MaK.V _
/
26 E
m«k\
Z
»i
.26 F
•^r.ri
C.Ai.Ml
M*k
XXXVIII,
12»
lab
>*,♦»■
94
A
24 B
24 M
7>
04-rO
'^1-53
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. ROUGH. R 41-49,
41 B
XXXIX.
42 B
fim//////////////////^///iil ,
Kn\\\\\\\\\s\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\W
45 C
1: 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. ROUGH. R 50- 74.
SI 63 _ . ssa 60^
o o o o o
55 E
XL.
66
M*-7^
e7b
^" Q O
57d
MAk
57«
MAr\
57 F
'-»*»
M«.U.
60 B 60 L
&«v.
Ge^.
«i»
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61 &
**>• H*.v
62 C
62 8
M*K.
Haf
62 M
yo-S<»
M^k.
64
65a
H9
.tS
6Bb
tti-te
60-73
65d
66 A
*r-7i
♦1.-77
66 B
66 a
Cev*.
Ha.ir
66 M
66 P
Crtjf
67
J9-7*-
68 A
68 M
HaK
atit'
69ft
6»b 69C
i|.»-fr* J*-7I
6Bd
69 G,
69 H
Hj.r,
69 H
H*-*
69 R
Hxr
H^f.
69 T
Gc/r>.
69 6
6»^,
72 N
74 A
74 D
<5«y N — /^3 ^a) \yn-78 Ha.y.
1 : 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. ROUGH. R 74-81.
74 (i
krrO\Mt\.
1 : 6
Nwfa.7
M.P.IV.7
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY, ROUGH. R 81-84
8*1 K 81 N 81 P 81 S
^^a.K.
82 A
82 B
82 D
82 a
83 A
ii-f7
83 B
83 G.
ANltV
84 C
Ma.K.
Ma-k.
'*3-7«
84 D
84 L
84 E
84 H
Ma.K
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. ROUGH. R 84-86.
84 S
XLIII.
1 : 6
ar
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. ROUGH. R 87-100
•• ' 89
J^.il
90 M
z.ii- ^^-^ ("■-•*')
89 (k
iH-t
Avw-r.
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if-l-bS^
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94 K
94. L
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MjlK.
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Ma.K
96 D
(177-8)
99
98
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1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. LATE. L 2-17.
2a 2 C 3
XLV.
12 G
16 C
Mai.
16 F
ffj-sp, Bo
Ma.W
16 &
J>i
16 N
16 S
L.p,v«.3
17b
17c
17F
17c
17M
a<?-(
1 : 6
17 N
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. LATE. L 17~32.
17 T 18 18 c
19>»
19b
XLVI.
19C
6fJf
26b
26 H
1 : 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. LATE. L 33-36.
33 A 33 B 33 C
l! 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. LATE. L 36-43.
36 K
:i36 N f, ,>36 P
XLVIII.
36 s
9"-- riri.-7i)
1:6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. LATE. L 44 52.
44
6».72,
1 : 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. LATE. L 53-64.
53V
L.
53 F
73-7*
rv-8o
53 C
53 H 53 J 53 K 53 M
53 O
53T
54b
60-78
1: 6
CORPUS OF PREHISTORIC POTTERY. LATE. L 66-97.
:> 67G C > 67 P ■-. ^ 68 ; — . 69 D
1 • 4
CORPUS OF SLATE PALETTES. 2-15.
2 3D 3 M
&?-«;
R63fr.ic ^ 33-A7
4 U
-=^3^=^
l/^SS
1:4
CORPUS OF SLATE PALETTES. 16-24.
LI 1 1.
H.T -^3
WC» XII
M3
79
1 :4
CORPUS OF SLATE PALETTES. 24-45.
LIV
26 H
A.irr
77,7 a
45 u
45 L
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45 M
45 s
1 :4
CORPUS OF SLATE PALETTES. 46-57.
LV
46 B
T.ll
7 7-80
.^ ^'-^ 46 D
X
46 M
47 D
47 M
77
l'o-r|,v,.y^,^ rx-66
T.(o&3
57 B
7+
57 D
57 H
1:4
CORPUS OF SLATE PALETTES. 58-75.
C-A-i 5*7 -66
1:4
CORPUS OF SLATE PALETTES. 76-87.
77 D.
/rrvn\
C-W.Xtt
1 :4
CORPUS OF SLATE PALETTES. 88-92.
88 M 90 L
1:4
CORPUS OF SLATE PALETTES. 94 99.
.95 D. 95 E 95 H
t:ii,io6o So
T.S'l 60 14.09
K
96 D
95 L
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96 H
"I TIT
98 H
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2 1 86f*
2 2 56 j
23 8x^
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15 90 a
26 91a'-
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ALTERATIONS
NA^ADA" NEW NO.
B 1 a B 1 F
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P 18 P 190L
19 19K
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25 25 1>
F 15 F 154-
w 47 w 479.
D 1 D In
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P 13 b; P 18
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46e 46 k
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36c 36 |>
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44fr 44 K
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REGISTERS.
LXI.
POTTE^V
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